Costa Rica

Resilience System


City fires are likely to increase with climate change--study

Foreign Aid: Supreme Court denies Trump administration request to cancel $2 billion in foreign aid

Deadly H5N1 bird flu strain has hit all but 1 continent, Australia

Misinformation Concerns: RFK Jr. focuses on unconventional measles treatments

Measles Outbreak: Pediatricians and Parents reactions

Long term health risks described in study of survivors of COVID-19 hospitalization

Analysis: Climate change will fuel struggles for land and resources

Americans Are Increasingly Aware That Climate Change Is Harming Their Health --survey

COVID 2024-25 vaccines 33% protective against emergency room or urgent care visits --study

Analysis: Who Will Fill the Gap as the U.S. Ends Foreign Aid Programs?

As the reality sets in that the United States is drastically diminishing its foreign assistance to developing countries, an urgent conversation is starting among governments, philanthropists, and global health and development organizations.

It is centered on one crucial question: Who will fill this gap?

Last year, the United States contributed about $12 billion to global health, money that has funded treatment of H.I.V. and prevention of new infections; children’s vaccines against polio, measles and pneumonia; clean water for refugees; and tests and medications for malaria.

Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 

Ebola: UN appeals for aid to Uganada after U.S. cancels its assistance

UN appeals for funds to help contain Uganda Ebola outbreak

KAMPALA, March 4 (Reuters) - The United Nations has launched an emergency appeal to raise $11.2 million to help fund Uganda's response to an Ebola outbreak that has killed two people, after the country's health budget was strained by U.S. cuts to foreign aid. ...

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U.S. vaccination rates are declining as more states loosen mandates

Texas measles outbreak fueled by distrust in public health and personal choice

Analysis: Five years on from the pandemic, how has Covid changed our world?

U.S. aid cuts may set polio eradication back -- WHO

U.S. actions may set polio eradication back, WHO says

LONDON, March 3 (Reuters) - The eradication of polio as a global health threat may be delayed unless U.S. funding cuts – potentially totaling hundreds of millions of dollars over several years – are reversed, a senior World Health Organization official has warned.
 
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